Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Venous leg ulcers (VLU) are the most common leg ulcer, can be painful, and limit work, lifestyles and activity, especially in older patients. There are few effective treatments - compression therapy (tight bandaging or stockings) helps healing, but about half the people with a VLU remain unhealed even after 12 weeks of treatment. Research suggests taking aspirin as well as using compression may speed up healing for VLU, but the current evidence is not enough to change clinical practice. We will conduct a randomised controlled trial to test whether using low dose aspirin (150 mg daily or placebo) really does speed up healing.


Clinical Trial Description

A pragmatic, community based, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised trial to determine whether low dose aspirin accelerates venous leg ulcer healing at 24 weeks when used in addition to compression. Participants in have compression therapy (system of choice guided by patient and/or clinical preference) as delivered through district nursing services at the study centres as a background treatment. Low dose aspirin (150 mg) or placebo will be taken once daily as an oral capsule.

Participants will be district nursing service patients in five study centres in New Zealand with prevalent or incident venous leg ulcers. A venous leg ulcer will be defined as a wound on the lower leg that has remained unhealed for 4 or more weeks, appears to be primarily venous in aetiology with other causative diseases ruled out. If the participant has two or more venous leg ulcers, the largest ulcer will be the reference ulcer.

Participants will receive three visits from the research nurse - visit 1 to screen for eligibility, visit 2 to consent and randomise the participant, visit 3 to collect outcome data. District nurses will continue to visit the participant (about weekly or more frequently if required) to provide routine care between research nurse visits.

Block randomisation will be used, stratified by study centre and prognostic index (ulcer size greater than 5cm2 and ulcer duration greater than 6 months) to ensure a balance of participants within study centres and for participants likely to be slow healers. Research nurses in the study centres will contact a central telephone answering service, provide information on inclusion criteria, exclusion criteria, and relevant clinical history on consented participants. Randomised participants will receive a bottle of 168 capsules of study medication identified only by unique code and will take the capsule until the reference ulcer heals or up to 24 weeks, whichever occurs sooner.

Participants will take the study medication for up to 24 weeks or until the reference ulcer heals. If the participant has a serious adverse event, needs to start taking aspirin, or must stop taking aspirin to use other medications, they will be withdrawn from treatment, although they will still be followed up at 24 weeks. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02158806
Study type Interventional
Source University of Auckland, New Zealand
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
Start date March 2015
Completion date March 31, 2017

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03903692 - A Comparative Evaluation of a MPS Dressing and a CMC Dressing on Subjects With Lower Extremity Venous Ulcers N/A
Completed NCT03257254 - Effect of VarIthena on Wound Healing in Venous Leg Ulcers (VLU)
Recruiting NCT03666754 - Early Glue Saphenous Vein Ablation With Compression Versus Compression Alone in the Healing of the Venous Ulcer N/A
Withdrawn NCT02912858 - Intermittent Pneumatic Compression of the Foot vs Geko Plus R-2 Neuromuscular Electrostimulation Device in Venous Leg Ulcer Patients N/A
Completed NCT02482038 - Geko Venous Leg Ulcer Study N/A
Completed NCT02652572 - Safety Study to Examine the Systemic Exposure of Granexin® Gel After Topical Application to Venous Leg Ulcers Phase 1
Unknown status NCT01658618 - Safety Study Providing 12 Months Follow-up From First Exposure to HP802-247 in Subjects With Venous Leg Ulcer N/A
Completed NCT05646121 - Suprasorb® A + Ag in the Treatment of Wounds at Risk of Infection and Infected Wounds
Completed NCT03077165 - Dose-response Relationship Study of S42909 on Leg Ulcer Healing Phase 2
Completed NCT04461132 - The Effect of Manual Lymphatic Drainage N/A
Completed NCT05974982 - Treatment Outcome of Autologous PRP Versus Conventional Therapy Among Patients With Chronic Venous Leg Ulcers Phase 1
Completed NCT04011371 - Cyanoacrylate Closure for Treatment of Venous Leg Ulcers N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03543007 - Evaluating the Safety and Efficacy of GrafixPLâ„¢PRIME for the Treatment of Chronic Venous Leg Ulcers N/A
Completed NCT03286140 - Early Venous Reflux Ablation Ulcer Trial N/A
Recruiting NCT05588583 - A Clinical Investigation to Follow the Progress of Exuding Chronic Wounds Using Mepilex® Up as the Primary Dressing. N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04613687 - Efficacy and Safety of a New Compression System URGO BD001 in the Treatment of VLU (FREEDOM) N/A
Recruiting NCT05549609 - A Study of XSTEM-VLU in Patients With Difficult-to-heal Venous Leg Ulcers Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05409976 - The GORE® VIAFORT Vascular Stent IVC Study N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05089890 - Clinical Investigation of Sorbact® Dressings N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03670329 - Management of Infection Risk in Non-comparative Trial (MINT) N/A